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Green pressure buys GP walk-in centre 6 month reprieve

Residents deserve answers over future of urgent care services, say Greens.

PROPOSALS to close the Brighton Station walk-in centre in March have been put on hold for a further six months.

A Council report has revealed that the walk-in centre will be funded until September 2019, while commissioners of the service ‘will not implement any significant changes until public engagement is complete.’

Green Councillors and Caroline Lucas MP raised concerns with health officials over their proposals to replace at short notice the walk-in centre with some services in ‘GP clusters,’ plans that Green Health Spokesperson Cllr Dick Page described as “vague and unrealistic.”

Questions posed by the Green Group of Councillors have revealed a serious underlying problem: that the city faces an estimated shortage of one GP to every 2,500 patients, a figure worse than other Sussex areas and now the second worst ratio anywhere in England.

Greens also called for more information on the impact that closing the walk-in centre could have on already stretched A&E (accident and emergency) services at the Royal Sussex County Hospital.

Around 400 patients a week are seen by clinicians at the walk-in centre, which is open from 8am – 8pm, seven days a week.

There are currently six different ways an individual can access urgent ‘same day’ care in Brighton and Hove, including 8am ‘ring up and be seen’ appointments at GP practices. However most options are unavailable if someone is not registered with a GP.

With increasing pressures facing local health services, Greens are now urging health officials to produce a clear plan for the future of urgent, or ‘same-day,’ care.

Cllr Dick Page
Cllr Dick Page

Green Health and Wellbeing Spokesperson Cllr Dick Page said: “Although news that the walk-in centre will remain open for a further six months is welcome, we still have serious concerns over the future of non-hospital urgent care. Proposals to replace the centre with GP clusters seem vague and unrealistic.

“Given the numbers of patients that are likely to be diverted from A&E by the provision of a walk-in centre – including those who are transient, who have not registered with a GP, or who simply are not able to see their GP, any proposals to close it will need to be supported by a clear contingency plan – not just more talk of ‘integration’ or ‘hubs,’ which are often a smokescreen for local health services absorbing yet more cuts. There also needs to be a clear and specific public consultation, laying out the facts, finances and options – without any spin.”

‘Grief Encounters’ at Switchboard

Rainbow Fund supports SWITCHBOARD in developing a new and essential initiative – Grief Encounters.

GRIEF Encounters is a pilot project that aims to support LGBT+ people who have experienced a bereavement.

In addition to the universal experiences of grief, pain and distress, LGBT+ people face other barriers and stressors in bereavement including homophobia (trans/bi/queerphobia), failure to acknowledge our relationships, estrangement from our families, legal and financial issues, being excluded from discussions and decision being made by family members and health care professionals.

There is currently no LGBT+ specific service for those experiencing a bereavement. In the New Year Switchboard is planning to start the setup of a peer support group providing an exclusive and dedicated space to explore our grief.

It is really important that the specific needs of the LGBT+ communities are voiced so that we can receive the best and most appropriate support.

Switchboard are keen to talk further to anyone wanting to share their experiences, thoughts and ideas. Also if you would like to be on their mailing list to receive updates about further developments of this project. phone Switchboard Office on 01273 234009 to speak to or leave a message for Jackie, Switchboard’s new Grief Encounters Development Worker or email her on jackie.engelberg@switchboard.org.uk

Brighton residents Christmas habits revealed

Research highlights the issue of festive anxiety…………

NEW research from Contact the Elderly, the national charity dedicated to tackling isolation and loneliness through face to face contact, has highlighted Christmas anxiety is a common festive issue with 78% of Brighton residents still without plans for Christmas Day.

Contact the Elderly commissioned the research, which also reveals that a quarter of us feel anxious and worry about making plans for the festive period, to highlight the impact of societal pressures on families over Christmas and the impact it can have on older people left to spend Christmas alone.

The charity released the festive research to coincide with the news that they’ve joined forces with Community Christmas, an organisation which aims to ensure no older person spends Christmas Day alone if they don’t want to.

The Community Christmas website lists events taking place across Brighton that are open to older, vulnerable people in the community who would otherwise be spending Christmas Day alone.

Twenty-two percent of those surveyed said that they would want to know about events taking place on Christmas Day across Brighton.

Any event, which creates the all-important connections that hold communities together, can be a Community Christmas event.

No two events are the same and they vary from community Christmas lunches to formal sit-down dinners in community centres like Befriended & Hope Community Christmas lunch in Hurstpierpoint and Hove Methodist Church.

Caroline Billington
Caroline Billington

Caroline Billington, founder of Community Christmas, said: “Community Christmas is growing organically with more and more events and activities being added to the site every day. I think it’s really important to emphasise that anyone can host an event; it doesn’t have to involve cooking a Christmas feast for 20 people. It could just mean arranging tea and Christmas cake at a local village hall, or singing Christmas carols in the pub. It’s anything that gets people together in the community who otherwise might be alone on Christmas Day.

“I can’t wait to see how it will change and evolve under the leadership of Contact the Elderly and create more community connections.”

Meryl Davies, Chief Executive of Contact the Elderly, added: “Everyone recognises that Christmas can be a difficult time of year, particularly for people who are isolated or vulnerable. Caroline made it her mission to ensure that anyone who doesn’t want to spend Christmas Day alone doesn’t have to. As an organisation, it is the perfect fit for Contact the Elderly, which has been fighting isolation and loneliness among older people for over 50 years through volunteer-led social gatherings.”

For more information on Contact the Elderly, click here:

For more information on Community Christmas activities, click here:

To upload your own event to the site, click here:

BREMF REVIEW: Peace in Europe @St Martin’s Church

It was highly fitting and poignant that the final concert in the Brighton Early Music Festival was on he centenary of Armistice Day and was entitled Peace in Europe.

THE spread of sacred music – mostly from the 18th century – was suitably sombre to match the mood of November 11.

Opening with The Miserere in C Minor by Czech composer Jan Dismas Zelenka, the night started with a melodious but melancholy mood. Elizabeth Adams (soprano) sang with a stunningly beautiful sonorous tone rising above the strings and oboe accompaniment.

In French composer Michel Richard Delalande’s De Profundis the soloists and chorus gave us rich red wine tones in Tim Dickinson’s bass-baritone, and its other sections were short, light and airy with a wonderful cello and organ accompaniment at times.

Josh Cooter has a very clear high tenor register and in this piece, he excelled.

Lovers of the Eurovision Song Contest would have loved Charpentier’s Te Deum, starting as it does with the long-running theme music for the European Broadcasting Union’s intro to the annual contest.

But the whole piece is a joy to hear, from the full-bodied bass-baritone solo Te Deum Laudamus to the more sonorous sound, of strings augmented with trumpets. The Dignare Domine again has cello and organ complementing the soprano and bass duet.

The highlight of the evening for me was Helen Charleston’s stunningly haunting rendition of Purcell’s Dido’s Lament – heard earlier that day at the Cenotaph in its military band version.

Rounding off the evening were four pieces by Handel. Here the BREMF players, and BREMF singers, under the brilliantly sympathetic direction of John Hancorn, gave us the full works of Handel’s gloriously rich and dramatic music.

All five soloists were on top form and Nancy Cole, (mezzo-soprano) was an equal to her colleagues, though she had not quite enough to get her teeth into, in my opinion.

BREMF does wonderful work in the educational world of Brighton and Hove, introducing pupils to classical music and encouraging the development of young musicians. It’s a project made all too necessary because of Government cuts in music education.

Long may it prosper in its glorious endeavour.

Peace in Europe was performed in the glorious surroundings of St Martin’s  Church, Lewes Road.

Review by Brian Butler

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